Religion
Religion 2
Ethnicity
Ethnicity 2
Wildcard
100

Belief that objects, such as plants and stones, or natural events, like thunderstorms and earthquakes, have a discrete spirit and conscious life.

Animism

100

A religion that attempts to appeal to all people, not just those living in a particular location.

universalizing religion

100

An attitude that tends to unify people and enhance support for a state

centripetal force

100

Identity with a group of people descended from a common ancestor.

race

100

The process through which people lose originality differentiating traits, such as dress, speech, particularities, or mannerisms, when they come into contact with another society or culture.

assimilation

200

The class or distinct hereditary order into which a Hindu is assigned according to religious law.

Caste

200

a state whose government is under the control of a ruler who is deemed to be divinely guided or under the control of a group of religious leaders.

theocracy

200

A force that divides people and countries

centrifugal force

200

Concept that ethnicities have the right to govern themselves.

self determination

200

Fashioning of a natural landscape by a cultural group

cultural landscape

300

A religion with a relatively concentrated spatial distribution whose principles are likely to be based on the physical characteristics of the particular location in which its adherents are concentrated.

Ethnic Religion

300

An individual who helps to diffuse a universalizing religion.

missionary

300

Loyalty and devotion to a particular nationality.

nationalism

300

State that contains two or more ethnic groups with traditions of self-determination that agree to coexist peacefully by recognizing each other as distinct nationalities

multi-national state

300

The adoption of cultural traits, such as language, by one group under the influence of another.

acculturation

400

 journey to a place considered sacred for religious purposes

Pilgrimage

400

a belief system that rejects religion, or the belief that religion should not be part of the affairs of the state or part of public education.

secularism

400

A state whose territory corresponds to that occupied by a particular ethnicity that has been transformed into a nationality.

nation-state

400

During the middle Ages, a neighborhood in a city set up by law to be inhabited only by Jews; now used to denote a section of a city in which members of any minority group live because of social, legal, or economic pressure.

ghetto

400

The systems of writing used in China and other East Asian countries in which each symbol represents an idea or a concept rather than a specific sound as is the case with letters in English.

ideograms

500

The basic unit of geographic organization in the Roman Catholic Church.

Diocese

500

Literal interpretation and strict adherence to basic principles of a religion (or a religious branch, denomination, or sect).

fundamentalism

500

A practice, primarily during the eighteenth century, in which European ships transported slaves from Africa to Caribbean islands, molasses from the Caribbean to Europe, and trade goods from Europe to Africa.

triangular slave trade

500

A suburban area with a cluster of a particular ethnic group.

ethnoburb

500

A language that results from the mixing of a colonizer's language with the indigenous language of the people being dominated.

creole or creolized language